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Daily Cartoon: Thursday, December 11th

2025-12-12 00:06:03

2025-12-11T15:38:41.738Z
Near a sidewalk Christmastree stall a man gestures in the air and speaks to a boy standing beside him.
“My father pulled me aside and said, ‘Son, you go out and you find the narrowest strip of sidewalk you can. That’s where you’ll sell Christmas trees.’ ”
Cartoon by Ellis Rosen

The People You Imagine Reading Your Letterboxd Posts

2025-12-11 19:06:02

2025-12-11T11:00:00.000Z
Man looking at laptop and tearing up.
Person looking at their phone and sitting in a chair.
Woman with heart eyes and surrounded by hearts looking at her laptop.
Person looking at laptop and leaning their cheek on their hand.
Man smiling and looking at his Academy Awards.
Person looking at laptop and resting their head in their hand.

“Wake Up Dead Man” and the Whodunnit Renaissance

2025-12-11 19:06:02

2025-12-11T11:00:00.000Z

Download a transcript.

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We all know the formula: it begins with a dead body, and quickly introduces a motley crew of outlandish characters, each with a motive for murder. The whodunnit genre has been a cultural fixture since the days of Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie—the latter of whom has been outsold only by the Bible and Shakespeare. Recently, though, the murder mystery has achieved a new level of saturation, with streaming services offering up a seemingly endless supply of glossy thrillers. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss how these new entries are updating the classic form. “Wake Up Dead Man,” the latest of Rian Johnson’s “Knives Out” movies, slyly incorporates social commentary, while shows like “Search Party” and “Only Murders in the Building” poke fun at the figure of the citizen sleuth. In our era of conspiracy theories and vigilante actors, there’s also a dark side to the archetype. “This desire to be the hero and to follow the logical trails and take things into your own hands—it's very appealing, if you do it right,” Schwartz says. “It’s great if you catch the right guy. If you don’t, and you catch the wrong one, the entire foundation of society crumbles.”

Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

“Knives Out” (2019)
“Glass Onion” (2022)
“Wake Up Dead Man” (2025)
“Big Little Lies” (2017-)
“The White Lotus” (2021-)
And Then There Were None,” by Agatha Christie
Rian Johnson Is an Agatha Christie for the Netflix Age,” by Anna Russell (The New Yorker)
The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side: A Miss Marple Mystery,” by Agatha Christie
“Only Murders in the Building” (2021-)
Nicole Kidman Gives Us What We Want in the Silly, Soapy ‘Perfect Couple,’ ” by Vinson Cunningham (The New Yorker)
“The Residence” (2025)
The Adventure of the Speckled Band,” by Arthur Conan Doyle
“Search Party” (2016-22)
The Hound of the Baskervilles,” by Arthur Conan Doyle
The “Encyclopedia Brown” books
“Clue” (1985)

New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.



Will Trump Torpedo North American Trade?

2025-12-11 19:06:02

2025-12-11T11:00:00.000Z

The negotiations that remade the North American Free Trade Agreement were, as one participant put it, a series of “near-death” experiences. For more than a year, starting in 2017, envoys from the United States, Canada, and Mexico met to determine the future of a trade alliance worth trillions of dollars. They clashed over everything from labor laws to the minutiae of duty-free imports, while repeatedly deflecting President Donald Trump’s threats to withdraw from the agreement. In the fall of 2018, they were finally prepared to sign what came to be known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. First, though, they needed to decide how long the accord should last.

NAFTA was what is called a “forever deal”—as with all of America’s major trade agreements, its terms were permanently fixed. This frustrated Trump’s trade czar, Robert Lighthizer, who believed that NAFTA had resulted in thousands of job losses and a ballooning trade deficit. Lighthizer wanted the U.S.M.C.A. to have an escape hatch: a review mechanism, or perhaps a fixed term. So he proposed that the agreement expire after four years.

In his book, “No Trade Is Free,” Lighthizer described his offer as “an aggressive opening bid.” Mexican and Canadian officials thought that it was insane: no business would expose its investments to a deal that could end so quickly. Even prominent Republicans expressed opposition. But Lighthizer found an ally in Jared Kushner, Trump’s key adviser on Mexico. Kushner had come to see trade negotiations as a game of mutual bluffing; the key to success, in his view, was getting your counterparts to “believe you are going to jump off a cliff.”

On August 25, 2018, Kushner invited Mexico’s foreign minister, Luis Videgaray, to his home in the upscale Washington, D.C., neighborhood of Kalorama. As he recalled in his own memoir, “Breaking History,” negotiators were scheduled to meet the next morning, and both sides were short on time: the Americans were eager to send the agreement to Congress before the midterm elections, and the Mexicans needed to reach a deal before a new President came into office.

Kushner made a proposal that he had cleared with Lighthizer. The agreement would remain in place for sixteen years, but, after six years, the countries would convene for a review. “If the parties agreed to an extension,” Kushner suggested, “the term of the agreement would reset for another sixteen years.” If they disagreed, “a ten-year termination clock would start to tick.” Videgaray left after midnight, having agreed to consult with the Mexican President, Enrique Peña Nieto.

In the morning, everyone gathered in Lighthizer’s office, across from the White House. “Let me share a proposal,” Kushner began—a theatrical gesture, since Trump and Peña Nieto had already been briefed on the plan. By the meeting’s end, negotiators had agreed to include a review mechanism, ending more than a year of gruelling talks. Soon, Trump stood in the Rose Garden, hailing the U.S.M.C.A. as “the most modern, up-to-date, and balanced trade agreement in the history of our country.”

For Mexican officials, one of the keys to accepting the deal was that the review would be triggered after six years rather than four: they predicted that Trump would serve two consecutive terms and leave office before the deadline came. In the meantime, they reasoned, the treaty would shield their nation’s economy from a hostile Administration. They turned out to be wrong. Trump returned to the White House four years later than expected, and the review of the U.S.M.C.A. is scheduled for next July, just seven months away. In Trump’s second term, his protectionist agenda has been even more aggressive and erratic than before. Most indications suggest that what will take place between now and the summer is less a review of America’s crucial trade relationships than a wholesale renegotiation.

In the years since the U.S.M.C.A was signed, Mexico and Canada have become America’s top trading partners. Millions of jobs depend on this economic alliance, which exceeds $1.8 trillion in trade. Officials are already shuttling between their various capitals for conversations about what the parties might get from it.

As the talks got under way, I sat down with Ildefonso Guajardo Villareal, a former secretary of the economy who led Mexico’s negotiations of the U.S.M.C.A. during his term. A short, dapper man of sixty-eight, Guajardo has been involved in every major trade accord that Mexico has signed since NAFTA. He built a reputation as a fearsome negotiator, once praised by Kushner for his ability to spin “technical issues into unsolvable deal-breakers.” Now he seemed pleased to be out of the fight. “I’ve got a trip coming up to Palm Beach,” he told me, in an airy cafeteria in Mexico City.

In 2018, Guajardo said, “It was clear to me from the beginning that time would be our best ally.” He left the most contentious points—including the sunset clause—for the end. Like his Canadian counterparts, he was focussed on securing modest updates on matters such as digital commerce while leaving the treaty largely intact.

Guajardo’s tactic worked: while he stalled, corporations and politicians came to influence Trump’s thinking. “There is the misconception that power in Washington is monolithic, when, in fact, it is a complex interweave of interests,” Guajardo said. In the spring of 2018, Trump decided to impose tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum from Mexico. “We responded in kind,” Guajardo said. “Mexico imposed a range of tariffs, targeting key products in Republican districts, like bourbon—and it clearly caused a stir inside the White House.”

Ultimately, Mexico and Canada managed to defend their interests. “The U.S.M.C.A. is not what I would characterize as a paradigm-changing agreement, in any shape or form,” Joshua P. Meltzer, a senior fellow in the Global Economy and Development program at the Brookings Institution, said. “The fundamentals, which are zero tariffs between the three countries, remained as they were under NAFTA.”

But Trump seems resolved to change that. “The mandate is really different today,” a former senior U.S. official who was involved in the 2018 negotiations told me. “Trump is going to want Canada and Mexico to pay something to access this market. We’re the biggest consumer market in the world. The dependencies that both countries have on us are enormous.” Trump seems unconcerned that extorting his partners contravenes the principles of what was designed as a free-trade accord. “I really don’t think that Trump cares about the agreement very much at all,” the official added. “He wants the U.S. itself to be a free agent.”

Trump spent the first half of 2025 roiling Mexico’s economy with scattershot demands. In March, he imposed a twenty-five-per-cent tariff on almost all Mexican imports—then, two days later, carved out an exception for goods covered by the U.S.M.C.A. By July, Trump was talking about raising the tariff rate to thirty per cent. He ultimately postponed, under the condition that Mexico address a list of more than fifty demands, ranging from access to lithium resources to expedited visas for U.S. representatives. This week, Trump issued a new threat: Mexico needed to transfer some sixty-five billion gallons of water to the U.S., under a long-standing treaty on water; failure to do so by the end of the year would trigger an additional five-per-cent tariff.

Thus far, Mexican officials have declined to retaliate against the tariffs, despite Trump’s flagrant violation of the U.S.M.C.A. “The Mexican government has adopted the stance that it isn’t in its interest to antagonize Trump,” Guajardo said. Officials have instead worked to reassure the public, even as the effects of economic fragility begin to show: stalled investments, closing auto plants, thousands of workers laid off. “If you begin a negotiation by telling business leaders that there is no other option, under a free-trade agreement, than acquiescing to tariffs—well, it’s dismaying, to say the least,” Guajardo said. “I get it, Trump’s attitude has changed. But if you kick off talks by signalling to the other side that you’re prepared to swallow such a bitter pill, then your margin of negotiation shrinks to zero.”

Meltzer is less convinced that Mexico can afford an aggressive posture. “The reality of the trilateral relationship is the U.S. holds practically all the cards,” he said. It doesn’t help that there are fewer people around Trump who argue for the virtues of free trade. In 2017, as Trump was preparing to sign an executive order announcing his intention to withdraw from NAFTA, his advisers summoned Sonny Perdue, the Secretary of Agriculture, to the White House. Perdue rushed over carrying a visual aid: maps showing the overlap between the areas that would be hardest hit and the counties where Trump had won. “These are your people,” Perdue said. By day’s end, the President had announced that the U.S. would remain a party to the agreement.

Today, Guajardo argued, the people handling the negotiation wield less influence, and they are less knowledgeable. “You can accuse Lighthizer of being a protectionist, but he is an authority on trade,” he said. “The only person with direct access to the White House these days is Howard Lutnick—and he’s utterly clueless.” In 2018, Kushner’s relationship with Videgaray was a crucial palliative, as the two men worked to resolve disputes behind the scenes. “They kept the blood from infesting the river, so to speak,” Guajardo said. Now Kushner is busy seeking a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia, and building an A.I. firm with Videgaray.

There is, however, one person who has had some success in managing Trump: Claudia Sheinbaum, the Mexican President. When Trump applied economic pressure on Mexico earlier this year, Sheinbaum deflected his threats with concessions on security. “Dumping everything into one bag—trade, narcotics, and immigration—is far from the ideal scenario,” Guajardo said. “But it’s become clear that Mexico’s actions on enforcement can help improve the terms of the negotiation.” It is no secret that Trump makes foreign-policy decisions based on his personal feelings about world leaders, and he seems to like Sheinbaum. “The best thing that President Sheinbaum can do is own the negotiation with Trump,” Guajardo said.

I asked Guajardo if there was still time for Mexico to draw its own red lines. “There should be,” he said, tentatively. In 2023, Mexico became the largest supplier of goods to the U.S., as manufacturers moved operations there to be closer to the American market. Trump needs Mexico, and its low-cost industrial base, in order to compete against China. “The level of economic integration in North America—and the leverage that Mexico has on manufacturing—is substantial,” Guajardo said. “And it will continue to be, with or without Trump.”

China has often been referred to as the U.S.M.C.A.’s uninvited fourth party. For the U.S., a key goal of the negotiations is to prevent China from circumventing tariffs by moving goods through Mexico or Canada. “The U.S. is going to push for much closer alignment on its China trade policy,” Meltzer said. The complication, he added, is that “we don’t even know what U.S. trade policy on China looks like at the moment.”

Still, Mexico has recently shown a willingness to appease Trump. After his reëlection, Mexico imposed a thirty-five-per-cent tariff on imported Chinese apparel and cracked down on retailers that violated trade rules that benefitted the U.S; it also rolled out a program designed to substitute Chinese imports with domestic goods. Marcelo Ebrard, Mexico’s current economy secretary, declared that reducing imports from China is his government’s “main objective.” But not everyone welcomed these initiatives. When Sheinbaum proposed expanding tariffs against China, it was met with fierce opposition in Mexico’s Congress. Legislators, along with business leaders, questioned whether their country should compromise its ties to China when its other major trading partner was so volatile.

These questions underline one of the great paradoxes of the U.S.M.C.A.’s revision: the three countries need to work together to compete with China, but Trump’s tariffs discourage meaningful coöperation. Nowhere is this clearer than in the competition for the minerals which are used to produce everything from batteries to smartphones. China dominates the market for these critical resources. Yet, as Bentley Allan, a political scientist at Johns Hopkins, noted, “If you look collectively at Mexico, the United States, and Canada, they have everything that you need.” Alaska, for example, has vast deposits of zinc, which is refined in British Columbia; the process spins off germanium, a crucial component in semiconductors.

China, however, has far greater refining capacity and a significant head start in mining. For North America to supply itself, Allan said, “We have to achieve scale and work collectively—not just because the minerals are scattered around geologically but also because we need to deploy a lot of capital.” It can take as long as fifteen years for a mine to become operational, and ramping up a country’s refining capacity is immensely costly. China’s production of minerals is also heavily subsidized; in order to compete, the North American countries need to agree on a price floor and keep it in place.

This requires a level of coördination that is at odds with Trump’s vision. Indeed, his tariffs have given his neighbors a reason to seek more reliable partners. If Canada and Mexico align their trade policies with the U.S., there is no guarantee that Trump won’t try to extract more concessions from them in the future—on trade or on almost any other subject. “It’s hard for anybody to plan based on the tariff structure that currently exists,” the former senior official said. “The one thing the President’s never going to be able to give them is certainty.”

For the moment, Canada is fighting harder, or at least more publicly, than Mexico. The Canadian Prime Minister, Mark Carney, describes the trade situation as a “rupture” with the U.S. His government has not only responded to Trump’s tariffs in kind; it has also worked to find new partnerships across Asia and Europe. “This is existential for us,” Tim Sargent, a former Canadian Deputy Minister of Trade who took part in the U.S.M.C.A. negotiations, told me. He saw a marked departure from 2018: Trump is now focussing more intently on Canada, and negotiators are contending with tariffs on everything from steel to lumber, ostensibly in the interest of national security. Sargent noted wryly, “It’s really stretching the imagination to think that lumber has national-security implications for the United States, unless the U.S. Navy is going to move back to wooden ships.”

This fall, Ontario’s provincial government aired a television ad that featured a recording of Ronald Reagan saying that tariffs “hurt every American worker and consumer.” Trump deemed the ad a “hostile act,” called off talks, and announced an additional ten-per-cent tariff on Canada. Even people in Trump’s camp said that this kind of volatility limited the scope of negotiation. “If we’re raising tariffs because the Premier of Ontario is showing a stupid ad, there’s no way we could give them the kind of certainty we would need in order to have a more ambitious agreement,” the former senior official said. If anything, Trump’s aggression made the Canadians more willing to endure tough bargaining. “There’s a feeling that our country is under threat, and it is a bit of a wartime atmosphere,” Sargent added. “In wartime, people are willing to suck it up.”

Last week, Trump suggested that he would exit the U.S.M.C.A.: “We’ll either let it expire or, well, maybe work out another deal with Mexico and Canada.” Some observers discount Trump’s bluster as mere gamesmanship. “The White House likes a tense, doom-and-gloom scenario, because then it can sell any outcome as a victory,” one Mexican official told me. Others predict that Trump will continue threatening to withdraw from the treaty, but will ultimately find it too politically difficult. He returned to the White House on a promise to create jobs and lower prices—to make the country “boom like we’ve never boomed before.” Instead, tariffs are fuelling inflation, and many experts believe that it is only a matter of time before the economy starts hemorrhaging jobs. “In any negotiation, there’s two things that matter,” Sargent said. “First is what economists call the outside option—if the deal falls apart, then what? The other thing that matters is how impatient you are.”

As in the previous round of negotiations, time does not appear to be on Trump’s side, particularly with the Supreme Court weighing a challenge to his tariff regime and with Republican leaders increasingly concerned about the coming midterm elections. But, Sargent suggested, it was still possible for Trump to cause havoc in the markets. “Last time, the goal was to get the deal—once we got the deal, we thought everything would be fine,” he said. “People are now realizing that, as long as Trump is in the White House, there really is no definitive end to the uncertainty. He’ll have significant power to impose tariffs. And the mere fact that we have a comprehensive trade agreement with his signature on it won’t stop him.” ♦

Inside Trump’s Artless Takeover of the Kennedy Center

2025-12-11 10:06:01

2025-12-11T01:30:00.000Z

The New Yorker staff writer Katy Waldman joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss how the Kennedy Center, the premier performing-arts hub in Washington, D.C., has been transformed under President Trump’s second term—and under his chaotic and unprecedented chairmanship of the organization. They talk about this year’s Kennedy Center Honors, which featured a group of honorees that reflect the President’s personal tastes, as well as the past year of mass firings, boycotts, and programming changes that have followed the Trump-led upheaval inside the institution. They also examine Trump’s relationship to arts and culture, and how the planned White House ballroom reflects the kind of cultural legacy he hopes to leave behind.

This week’s reading:

How to Leave the U.S.A.,” by Atossa Araxia Abrahamian

Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.

How the Kennedy Center Has Been Transformed by Trumpism

2025-12-11 07:06:03

2025-12-10T23:00:51.298Z

When the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts opened its doors, in 1971, the Times’ architecture critic, Ada Louise Huxtable, was not impressed. She described the building’s style as “aggrandized posh” and sniffed that its overlong corridors “would be great for drag racing.” The 2,360-seat Opera House, she wrote, looks like “one of those passe, redpadded drugstore candy‐valentines,” and, on Sunday night, at the forty-eighth Kennedy Center Honors, that’s exactly what it was—a tacky, supersized love letter to the center’s self-installed chairman, President Donald Trump.

Every detail of the ceremony appeared to have been plucked from Trump’s mood board, an indelible blend of revanchist impulses and eighties camp. The Honors medallions, which historically were trimmed in rainbow ribbon and had been made, for forty-seven years, by the Baturin family, in Bethesda, Maryland, were redesigned, by Tiffany & Co., with a navy-blue ribbon purportedly associated with “tradition.” This year’s awardees were the country singer George Strait, the glam-rock band Kiss, the Broadway tenor Michael Crawford—known for his defining role as the Phantom of the Opera—the disco queen Gloria Gaynor, and Sylvester Stallone, of “Rocky” and “Rambo” fame. “We’ve had no group like it,” Trump said, an accurate statement. No previous cohort of Honors talent has so perfectly reflected a single person’s taste.

Also a seeming tribute to Trump: steakhouse salads served in glass cups outside the auditorium; Mar-a-Lago-faced women done up as if “Thank you for your attention to this matter!” were a dress code. (“This matter” being boobs.) Selfie stations were arranged around the Grand Foyer, the backdrops resplendent with crushed roses, cinematic skylines, and guitars. Greg Brockman, the president of OpenAI, milled about with political figures such as Marco Rubio, Howard Lutnick, Kari Lake, and Sean Duffy. Kellyanne Conway, posed for a photo, draped in emerald gauze. No fewer than nine of the red-carpet-walkers were associated with Paramount Skydance, which recently had a large deal go through Trump’s F.C.C. and is now angling to buy Warner Brothers. (Later this month, the Honors show will be broadcast on CBS, a Paramount-owned network.) “D.C. isn’t as bad as they say it is,” a guest in a wine-red jacket advised his companions.

Compared with the FIFA World Cup draw, which had taken place at the center a few days earlier—a genuinely star-studded affair, during which Trump was awarded a cursed-looking object representing the sports body’s inaugural Peace Prize—the Honors seemed like an afterthought, with what scanned as a preponderance of fresh-faced young politicos talking shop. Fashion-wise, a polished banality and a sensitivity to traditional gender roles prevailed: mermaid waves and clean shaves, furs and flag pins. As we filed into the Opera House, the crystal chandelier, a gift from Austria, twinkled above us. If it crashed to the ground, as in the first act of “The Phantom of the Opera,” would Crawford be suspected? Or D.E.I.?

Perhaps the most radical change to the ceremony this year was that the chairman would be m.c.’ing the proceedings himself. It is a job that plays to Trump’s strengths as an entertainer: charisma, mischief, unpredictability. Entering the building, he teased that “maybe I haven’t prepared” and that “maybe you want to be a little loose.” Soon after he took the stage, he promised to “try to act like Johnny Carson.”

Trump’s in-person-hosting duties were limited to three sets of brief remarks. He largely avoided politics, save for a few asides: “They tried to get Biden to do this”—helm the Honors—he said, adding, “I would have watched!” He revelled in dusting off his real-estate-impresario persona. Earlier in the evening, Trump said, he’d toured the Kennedy Center grounds—he has secured two hundred and fifty-seven million dollars from Congress for physical repairs—and he’d marvelled at the “gorgeous” SyberJet Lounge, previously the Opera House Circles Lounge, which got its new name when the aircraft manufacturer sponsored the red carpet for a Stuttgart Ballet performance at the center, in October. (This was a consolation prize of sorts, after the Alvin Ailey dance company declined to make its annual appearance at the Center.) “The Trump Kennedy Center—” Trump began, and paused. The crowd cheered. “Oops,” he said impishly.

It’s been a year of embarrassment and chaos for the Kennedy Center, a sprawling organization that also houses the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington National Opera. The cultural hub has served as one of the higher-profile demolition projects of Trump’s second term, ever since Trump posted, on a Friday evening in early February, that he planned to fire the board’s then chairman, David Rubenstein, and other trustees who did not “share our vision for a Golden Age in Arts and Culture.” By the following Wednesday, Deborah Rutter, who had served as the president of the Kennedy Center for more than a decade, had been dismissed, along with the organization’s general counsel and all of the Biden appointees on the traditionally nonpartisan board. They were replaced with allies of the President’s, including the singer Lee Greenwood; the White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles; the Fox News anchor Laura Ingraham; and Trump’s longtime adviser Dan Scavino. And Trump installed Richard Grenell, a former ambassador to Germany, who briefly served as the head of intelligence during Trump’s first term, as the center’s interim president. “Ric, welcome to show business!” he posted on Truth Social.

Trump’s ostensible reasons for seizing the reins were that the Kennedy Center’s programming had taken a “very wokey” turn, with “Drag Shows specifically targeting our youth,” and that this D.E.I. capitulation had blown a hole in the organization’s finances. “The Kennedy Center learned the hard way that if you go woke, you will go broke,” the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said at the time. (As The New Yorker reported in April, the center’s revenue had in fact grown steadily under Rutter’s leadership, and its endowment increased by more than fifty per cent.) Grenell’s arrival marked a swing toward the reactionary, and the advent of leadership that’s more fluent in the culture wars than in culture. Listing pronouns in e-mail signatures has been expressly prohibited. In September, the center hosted a prayer vigil for the slain right-wing activist Charlie Kirk. Some Kennedy Center old-timers have dubbed Grenell and his lieutenants, Nick Meade, Rick Loughery, and Nick Canny, “the Icks.” (Grenell is also known as Grendel.)

Employees told me that the new hires “don’t understand the basic vocabulary” of arts administration. They have questions. Things like, what is “capacity”? What is “an arena show”? What is a “backline”? What is “stage left”? What is an “usher”? Perhaps predictably, Trump’s takeover and firing of veteran cultural programmers made the center radioactive to performers. The comedian Issa Rae and the musical “Hamilton” pulled out of their contracts soon after Trump appointed himself chair. Other artists quietly ghosted the arts hub; at least one agreed to perform, but asked not to be named in social media posts.

The center has weathered months of damaging press—reports of plummeting ticket sales, skittish donors, and aggrieved artists waiting for payment. Even as the organization’s reputation has tanked, Grenell has found people to write big checks. For this year’s Honors, he dramatically raised prices for the choicest seats. In a phone call, Grenell said he also supports “niche programming which is not always able to sell tickets,” so long as it can find a deep-pocketed benefactor. (He asked the Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s foundation to underwrite the center’s production of “Parade,” citing the production’s “uplifting” beauty and warnings against antisemitism.) Yet the center’s president is known to be an unreliable chronicler of its fortunes. For example, Grenell flaunted that “The Sound of Music” sold out on its opening night. According to internal sales figures reviewed by The New Yorker, however, it was at fifty-four-per-cent capacity. In general, one staffer told me, “I’d have better results selling shows in the pandemic with half the people dying.”

Under Grenell’s leadership, the Kennedy Center has appeared to transform into a seat of political and interpersonal backscratching. The new president appointed Elliot Berke, his longtime lawyer, as the organization’s general counsel, and Lisa Dale, a former campaign adviser to Kari Lake (Lake’s husband, Jeff Halperin, has also worked for the center, making social media videos), to lead the sixteen-person department, formerly a team of nearly a hundred. The new fund-raising approach is more typical of political campaigns, multiple employees told me—a series of one-and-done, steroidal cash shots, often with the expectation of access in return. Grenell “cares about countries and corporations,” one staffer said. “He doesn’t care about people.”

When Trump appointed Grenell the acting intelligence director during Trump’s first term, Grenell drew criticism for not registering as having advocated on behalf of a foreign power after his public-relations firm, Capitol Media Partners, worked for a foundation funded by autocratic Hungary. (A lawyer for Grenell at the time said he was not required to register.) In October, the Kennedy Center partnered with the Hungarian Embassy on a concert, featuring the violinist Zoltán Mága, that doubled as, in Mága’s words, a celebration “of Hungarian freedom, Christian values, and national pride.” According to an archived version of Grenell’s personal website, his P.R. firm also had clients based in Kazakhstan; Kennedy Center spokesperson, Roma Daravi, revealed last month that the Kazakh government has pledged a donation to the center.

At the end of November, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, of Rhode Island, announced that the Environment and Public Works Committee would be opening an investigation into Grenell’s leadership. “The Center is being looted to the tune of millions of dollars in foregone revenue, canceled programming, unpaid use of its facilities, and wasteful spending on luxury restaurants and hotels,” Whitehouse wrote. A press release for the investigation called the Kennedy Center “a slush fund and private club for Trump’s friends and political allies.” Grenell disputes these allegations, though it’s undeniable that the center has become overtly MAGA-aligned since he took over. In the past few months, the center has hosted a NewsNation “bipartisan town hall” featuring Chris Cuomo and Tom Homan and a Christian Persecution Summit organized by CPAC, which, according to Whitehouse, paid a sharply reduced rental fee. Documents obtained by Whitehouse suggest that FIFA used the center’s buildings for free, but a spokesperson for Grenell said that the soccer organization donated over two million dollars, in addition to providing five million in “sponsorship opportunities.”

The irony of all of this is that Trump was drawn to the Kennedy Center by its cultural prestige—a resource that his loyalists’ cronyism and self-dealing have grievously depleted. The center has historically relied on “underplays,” in which artists accept much lower rates than they otherwise would in order to perform at a culturally significant venue. Now that the space’s reputation is tarnished, performing talent has less incentive to settle for those smaller fees. And, for all of the Administration’s insistence that being woke made the Kennedy Center broke, there’s little indication that the traditionalist counterprogramming is bringing in ticket sales. A Noël concert that Grenell ardently touted as early as February—“we are doing a big, huge celebration of the birth of Christ at Christmas,” he said—is scheduled for December 17th. As of December 8th, it had sold just over three hundred tickets, out of around twenty-three hundred.

At this point, we know what Trump wants to do with the Kennedy Center. As a real-estate developer, he wants to renovate it; as a politician, he wants to assimilate it into his movement. But Trump’s investment in the organization feels deeply personal. Each honoree seemed to represent a different aspect of the President’s idealized self. There was Kiss—a group of rebellious rockers from Queens. Strait, who evokes a romantic notion of the sturdy, unpretentious everyman, a guy who knows how to lasso a bull. As for Gaynor, the President spoke fervently about the inspiration to be found in the “three simple words” of her signature song: “I will survive.” And Stallone, Trump said, his voice heavy with feeling, was “the greatest underdog in cinema.”

Most illuminating of all might be Crawford, whom Kelsey Grammer couldn’t even introduce without breaking into a self-deprecating ditty. (“Hello, Michael,” he sang, to the tune of “Hello, Dolly,” his voice tremulous with incomplete commitment to the bit.) The soprano Laura Osnes, who was ostracized by the Broadway community after the New York Post publicized the fact that she hadn’t been vaccinated for COVID, played Christine, the heroine of “Phantom of the Opera.” Osnes teamed up with David Phelps, a Christian recording artist, for the show’s titular anthem. As the number reached its climax, the Phantom delivered his booming command to “sing, my angel of music!” Christine, the glittering captive, strained her voice higher and higher.

For all his Broadway aspirations, Trump, when he took the stage as the host, didn’t sound like someone whose dream was coming true. His manner was perfunctory, a bit bitter. “Many of you are miserable, horrible people,” Trump told the audience, to laughter. Some of the night’s biggest acts, he said later, “probably don’t like me very much.” Technical snafus occasionally disturbed the proceedings. A couple of times, the house lights came up before a video was over; at one point, in the middle of a speech, crew members started transporting a piano. ♦